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Action Recognition

04/21/11. Action Recognition. Computer Vision CS 543 / ECE 549 University of Illinois Derek Hoiem. This section: advanced topics. Action recognition 3D Scenes and Context Massively data-driven approaches. What is an action?. Action: a transition from one state to another

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Action Recognition

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  1. 04/21/11 Action Recognition Computer Vision CS 543 / ECE 549 University of Illinois Derek Hoiem

  2. This section: advanced topics • Action recognition • 3D Scenes and Context • Massively data-driven approaches

  3. What is an action? • Action: a transition from one state to another • Who is the actor? • How is the state of the actor changing? • What (if anything) is being acted on? • How is that thing changing? • What is the purpose of the action (if any)?

  4. How do we represent actions? Categories Walking, hammering, dancing, skiing, sitting down, standing up, jumping Poses Nouns and Predicates <man, swings, hammer> <man, hits, nail, w/ hammer>

  5. What is the purpose of action recognition? • To describe http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxJOhOna9OQ • To predict http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQm25nW6aZw

  6. How can we identify actions? Motion Pose Held Objects Nearby Objects

  7. Representing Motion Optical Flow with Motion History Bobick Davis 2001

  8. Representing Motion Optical Flow with Split Channels Efros et al. 2003

  9. Representing Motion Tracked Points Matikainen et al. 2009

  10. Representing Motion Space-Time Interest Points Corner detectors in space-time Laptev 2005

  11. Representing Motion Space-Time Interest Points Laptev 2005

  12. Representing Motion Space-Time Volumes Blank et al. 2005

  13. Examples of Action Recognition Systems • Feature-based classification • Recognition using pose and objects

  14. Action recognition as classification Retrieving actions in movies, Laptev and Perez, 2007

  15. Remember image categorization… Training Training Labels Training Images Image Features Classifier Training Trained Classifier

  16. Remember image categorization… Training Training Labels Training Images Image Features Classifier Training Trained Classifier Testing Prediction Image Features Trained Classifier Outdoor Test Image

  17. Remember spatial pyramids…. Compute histogram in each spatial bin

  18. Features for Classifying Actions • Spatio-temporal pyramids (14x14x8 bins) • Image Gradients • Optical Flow

  19. Features for Classifying Actions • Spatio-temporal interest points Corner detectors in space-time Descriptors based on Gaussian derivative filters over x, y, time

  20. Classification • Boosted stubs for pyramids of optical flow, gradient • Nearest neighbor for STIP

  21. Searching the video for an action • Detect keyframes using a trained HOG detector in each frame • Classify detected keyframes as positive (e.g., “drinking”) or negative (“other”)

  22. Accuracy in searching video Withkeyframe detection Withoutkeyframe detection

  23. “Talk on phone” “Get out of car” Learning realistic human actions from movies, Laptev et al. 2008

  24. Approach • Space-time interest point detectors • Descriptors • HOG, HOF • Pyramid histograms (3x3x2) • SVMs with Chi-Squared Kernel Spatio-Temporal Binning Interest Points

  25. Results

  26. Action Recognition using Pose and Objects Modeling Mutual Context of Object and Human Pose in Human-Object Interaction Activities, B. Yao and Li Fei-Fei, 2010 Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  27. Human-Object Interaction • Holistic image based classification • Integrated reasoning • Human pose estimation • Head • Left-arm • Right-arm • Torso • Right-leg • Left-leg Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  28. Human-Object Interaction • Holistic image based classification • Integrated reasoning • Human pose estimation • Object detection • Tennis racket Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  29. Human-Object Interaction • Holistic image based classification • Integrated reasoning • Human pose estimation • Object detection • Action categorization • Head • Left-arm • Right-arm • Torso • Tennis racket • Right-leg • Left-leg HOI activity: Tennis Forehand Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  30. Human pose estimation & Object detection Human pose estimation is challenging. Difficult part appearance Self-occlusion Image region looks like a body part • Felzenszwalb & Huttenlocher, 2005 • Ren et al, 2005 • Ramanan, 2006 • Ferrari et al, 2008 • Yang & Mori, 2008 • Andriluka et al, 2009 • Eichner & Ferrari, 2009 Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  31. Human pose estimation & Object detection Human pose estimation is challenging. • Felzenszwalb & Huttenlocher, 2005 • Ren et al, 2005 • Ramanan, 2006 • Ferrari et al, 2008 • Yang & Mori, 2008 • Andriluka et al, 2009 • Eichner & Ferrari, 2009 Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  32. Human pose estimation & Object detection • Facilitate Given the object is detected. Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  33. Human pose estimation & Object detection Object detection is challenging Small, low-resolution, partially occluded Image region similar to detection target • Viola & Jones, 2001 • Lampert et al, 2008 • Divvala et al, 2009 • Vedaldi et al, 2009 Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  34. Human pose estimation & Object detection Object detection is challenging • Viola & Jones, 2001 • Lampert et al, 2008 • Divvala et al, 2009 • Vedaldi et al, 2009 Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  35. Human pose estimation & Object detection • Facilitate Given the pose is estimated. Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  36. Human pose estimation & Object detection • Mutual Context Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  37. Mutual Context Model Representation A: Activity A Human pose Tennis forehand Croquet shot Volleyball smash H O: Object O Body parts Tennis racket Croquet mallet Volleyball P2 P1 PN H: fO Intra-class variations f2 f1 fN Image evidence • More than one H for each A; • Unobserved during training. P: lP: location; θP: orientation; sP: scale. f: Shape context. [Belongie et al, 2002] Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  38. Mutual Context Model Representation Markov Random Field • , , : Frequency of co-occurrence between A, O, and H. A Clique weight Clique potential H O P2 P1 PN fO f2 f1 fN Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  39. Mutual Context Model Representation Markov Random Field • , , : Frequency of co-occurrence between A, O, and H. A Clique weight Clique potential • , , : Spatial relationship among object and body parts. H O size location orientation P2 P1 PN fO f2 f1 fN Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  40. Mutual Context Model Representation Markov Random Field • , , : Frequency of co-occurrence between A, O, and H. A Clique weight Clique potential • , , : Spatial relationship among object and body parts. H O Obtained by structure learning size location orientation • Learn structural connectivity among the body parts and the object. P2 P1 PN fO f2 f1 fN Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  41. Mutual Context Model Representation Markov Random Field • , , : Frequency of co-occurrence between A, O, and H. A Clique weight Clique potential • , , : Spatial relationship among object and body parts. H O size location orientation • Learn structural connectivity among the body parts and the object. P2 P1 PN • and : Discriminative part detection scores. fO f2 f1 Shape context + AdaBoost fN [Andriluka et al, 2009] [Belongie et al, 2002] [Viola & Jones, 2001] Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  42. Model Learning • Input: A H cricket bowling cricket shot O P2 P1 PN • Goals: fO Hidden human poses f2 f1 fN Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  43. Model Learning • Input: A H cricket bowling cricket shot O P2 P1 PN • Goals: fO Hidden human poses f2 f1 Structural connectivity fN Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  44. Model Learning • Input: A H cricket bowling cricket shot O P2 P1 PN • Goals: fO Hidden human poses f2 f1 Structural connectivity fN Potential parameters Potential weights Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  45. Model Learning • Input: A H cricket bowling cricket shot O P2 P1 PN • Goals: fO Hidden human poses Hidden variables f2 f1 Structural connectivity fN Structure learning Potential parameters Parameter estimation Potential weights Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  46. Model Learning A • Approach: croquet shot H O P2 P1 PN • Goals: fO Hidden human poses f2 f1 Structural connectivity fN Potential parameters Potential weights Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  47. Model Learning A • Approach: Hill-climbing H Joint density of the model Gaussian priori of the edge number O P2 P1 PN Remove an edge Add an edge • Goals: fO Hidden human poses f2 f1 Structural connectivity fN Potential parameters Remove an edge Add an edge Potential weights Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  48. Model Learning A • Approach: • Maximum likelihood H O • Standard AdaBoost P2 P1 PN • Goals: fO Hidden human poses f2 f1 Structural connectivity fN Potential parameters Potential weights Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  49. Model Learning A • Approach: Max-margin learning H O P2 P1 PN • Goals: fO Hidden human poses Notations f2 • xi: Potential values of the i-th image. • wr: Potential weights of the r-th pose. • y(r): Activity of the r-th pose. • ξi: A slack variable for the i-th image. f1 Structural connectivity fN Potential parameters Potential weights Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

  50. Learning Results Cricket defensive shot Cricket bowling Croquet shot Slide Credit: Yao/Fei-Fei

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